Cheney defends Guantanamo prison

US Vice-President Dick Cheney has argued against closing down the Guantanamo Bay detention centre, saying it was not hurting America's image abroad.

14 Jun 2005 22:53 GMT

The US vice-president felt the detention centre was useful

President George Bush has left the door open to the eventual closing of the notorious detention centre, saying he was willing to look at all alternatives, but Cheney said Guantanamo Bay was still serving a useful function.

"Given the nature of the conflict that we're involved in, there would need to be some kind of a facility that would allow you to detain people who are enemy combatants," Cheney said in a question-and-answer session at a journalism awards ceremony.

In fact, he said, "if we didn't have that facility at Guantanamo to undertake this activity, we'd have to have it someplace else, because they're a vital source of intelligence information".

Global outcry

Calls for closing the prison camp for foreign suspects have mounted in the past few weeks after Amnesty International called it a "gulag".

Hundreds have been held at Guantanamo without charge

Democrats have said Guantanamo Bay was contributing to a US image problem in the Muslim world.

"The stain of Guantanamo has become the primary recruiting tool for our enemies," Vermont Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy said.

Cheney said it was his feeling that "the track record there is on the whole pretty good, and that this is an essential part of our strategy of prevailing and winning in the ongoing war on terror".

"Now, does this hurt us from the standpoint of international opinion? I, frankly, don't think so. And my own personal view of it is that those who are most urgently advocating that we shut down Guantanamo probably don't agree with our policies anyway," Cheney said.

Cheney said if the more than 500 detainees held at Guantanamo Bay without charge were to be released, then the United States would be "putting a lot of bad guys back on the street to do exactly what they started to do in the first place".

To support that claim, he said at least 10 of the 200 people who had been held at the US base on Cuba and were later returned to their home countries had rejoined the fight and been captured.